Karachi Kings 134 for 5 (Livingstone 38, Iftikhar 33*, Imad 19*, Lamichhane 2-17) beat Lahore Qalandars 133 for 5 (de Villiers 33, Sohail 29*, Iftikhar 2-4) by five wickets
How the game played out
Karachi and Lahore are the two largest cities in Pakistan,
boasting a population in excess of 25 million. These are gigantic numbers, but
when the two meet in the PSL, big numbers are in short supply. The two played
out an edgy low-scoring contest for the second time in ten days, but this time
Karachi Kings prevailed, thanks to an an all-round performance from Iftikhar
Ahmed helping them to a five-wicket win. Karachi's need was greater, and they
propel themselves back in contention for the playoffs.
It was a subdued batting performance from Lahore, who never
seemed to get the lift-off they needed to put up a more testing total. Fakhar
Zaman was well contained at the top, while Haris Sohail could manage no more
than a start. Even AB de Villiers couldn't be his destructive self, and even
though the South African was at the crease for the better part of Lahore's
innings, they would have been hoping for more than a somewhat plodding 32-ball
33. Iftikhar was the pick of Karachi's bowlers, oddly bowling just two overs,
but conceding just four runs and taking the wickets of Fakhar and Haris in the
process. It meant they put up 133, left needing another big performance from
their bowlers on a track that had begun to slow.
The bowlers did give it a right go, with Sandeep Lamichhane
continuing his dazzling form. He took 2 for 17 in his four, with David Weise
impressively economical and Haris Rauf irrepressibly valiant. But not everyone
was able to deliver in the way they needed to defend a low total. Yasir Shah was
disappointing and expensive, and when Aizaz Cheema bowled a no-ball that went
for four, Imad Wasim thumped the ensuing free hit for another boundary. That
was it for the Lahore fightback, and impressive as it had been, the
flawlessness necessary to defend 133 wasn't quite there.
Turning point
Iftikhar's first over was the stuff of dreams for Imad's
side. He bowled wide to the left-hander, frustrating Fakhar, who skied his
second ball straight to a fielder. Two balls later, he had de Villiers sweeping
straight to Babar Azam, who dropped a simple catch. Off the last ball, there
was a run-out chance, de Villiers surviving by inches. Iftikhar's day had just
begun, and Lahore would never get on the front foot again.
Fakhar opened the bowling in defense of a low total. There
was little margin for error in the Powerplay, and the gamble did not work.
Karachi carted him around for 14, and they were already off and running.
Star of the day
He won't get the plaudits today because there was just so
much happening, but just when Karachi seemed like they might lose their way,
Liam Livingstone's calm head set them back on course. Coming in during a time
when Karachi had scored just 10 runs in four overs, he began his innings by
taking six singles in Lamichhane's third over. In the next two overs, he found
a four and a six off Weise and Yasir to keep the asking rate in check. That
fifty-run partnership with Colin Ingram may not be the most explosive, but it
was precisely what Karachi required in a moment when Lahore threatened to undo
all their good work. Livingstone ensured that wouldn't happen, scoring 38 off
34 to become the tournament's leading run-scorer, and more importantly, keep
his side in real contention.
The big miss
It might have been conjectured that bowling with Yasir would
give Lamichhane an invaluable learning experience, but on the evidence of their
performances, much of the advice may be heading the other way. While Lamichhane
has thrived after a rough start, Yasir's game looks like it has fallen away badly.
He never looked in control of the spinning deliveries, and whenever he tried
the googly, he invariably ended up dragging it short. The batsmen appeared to
pick him out of the hand far better than they did the Nepalese teenager.
The 11th over saw Livingstone mete out the toughest
punishment, smashing him for two fours and a six on an over that cost 18. That
brought the asking rate from 7.5 to almost a run a ball, with Yasir conceding
21 off 3.1 overs. The contrast of Lamichhane's success gives the more
experienced Yasir plenty to ponder with regards to adapting his game for the
shortest format.
Where the teams stand
Karachi and Lahore now both have three wins in seven games,
occupying fourth and fifth positions respectively. They're ahead of Multan Sultans,
who have just two wins in seven.
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